An NBA team that has spent all its cap space and doesn’t have any of its mid-level or bi-annual exception available still always has the ability to sign a player to a minimum-salary contract, unless that club is right up against its hard cap.
Teams with cap room or with access to the non-taxpayer mid-level exception will have a little more flexibility to sign players to longer-term minimum-salary contracts. However, teams without cap room and without any other exceptions on hand can still use the minimum salary exception to add as many players as roster limits and the hard cap allow, for contracts of up to two years.
[RELATED: Values of 2024/25 mid-level, bi-annual exceptions]
Undrafted free agents and second-round picks are often recipients of minimum-salary contracts, but there are plenty of veterans who end up settling for the minimum too. Because a player’s minimum salary is determined by how much NBA experience he has, many veterans will earn more than twice as much money as a rookie will in 2024/25 on a minimum-salary contract.
Listed below are 2024/25’s minimum salary figures, sorted by years of NBA experience. If a player spent any time on an NBA club’s active regular season roster in a given season, he earned one year of experience. So any player with zero years of experience has not yet made his NBA debut.
These figures represent approximately a 3.36% increase on last season’s minimum salaries, since that’s the amount of the NBA’s salary cap increase for 2024/25.
Here’s the full breakdown:
Years of Experience | Salary |
---|---|
0 | $1,157,153 |
1 | $1,862,265 |
2 | $2,087,519 |
3 | $2,162,606 |
4 | $2,237,691 |
5 | $2,425,403 |
6 | $2,613,120 |
7 | $2,800,834 |
8 | $2,988,550 |
9 | $3,003,427 |
10+ | $3,303,771 |
Because the NBA doesn’t want teams to avoid signing veteran players in favor of cheaper, younger players, the league reimburses clubs who sign veterans with three or more years of experience to one-year, minimum-salary contracts. Those deals will only count against the cap – and against a team’s bank balance – for $2,087,519, the minimum salary for a player with two years of experience.
For instance, Eric Gordon, who has 16 seasons of NBA experience, will reportedly sign a one-year, minimum-salary contract with the Sixers, who will only be charged $2,087,519 for Gordon’s contract. He’ll earn $3,303,771, but the NBA will make up the difference. This only applies to one-year contracts, not to multiyear deals.
If a player signs a minimum-salary contract after the regular season begins, he’ll earn a prorated portion of the amount listed above.
Those figures listed above also only apply to players who are signing new contracts in 2024/25. Players who are in the second, third, or fourth year of a minimum-salary deal will be earning a slightly different predetermined amount.
For example, Warriors big man Trayce Jackson-Davis – who signed a minimum-salary contract last offseason and now has one year of NBA experience – will earn a $1,891,857 salary in the second year of his contract, more than the $1,862,265 he would receive if he were signing a new minimum deal this fall. That’s because his second-year salary is based on a 5% raise over last season’s minimum salary for a player with one year of experience, whereas the cap rose by just 3.36%.
Here’s what multiyear minimum-salary contracts signed in 2024/25 will look like:
Experience |
2024/25 | 2025/26 | 2026/27 | 2027/28 |
---|---|---|---|---|
0 | $1,157,153 | $1,955,377 | $2,296,271 | $2,486,995 |
1 | $1,862,265 | $2,191,897 | $2,378,864 | $2,573,347 |
2 | $2,087,519 | $2,270,735 | $2,461,462 | $2,789,215 |
3 | $2,162,606 | $2,349,578 | $2,667,944 | $3,005,085 |
4 | $2,237,691 | $2,546,675 | $2,874,429 | $3,220,959 |
5 | $2,425,403 | $2,743,776 | $3,080,918 | $3,436,836 |
6 | $2,613,120 | $2,940,876 | $3,287,406 | $3,453,941 |
7 | $2,800,834 | $3,137,977 | $3,303,770 | $3,799,338 |
8 | $2,988,550 | $3,153,598 | $3,634,150 | $3,799,338 |
9 | $3,003,427 | $3,468,960 | $3,634,150 | $3,799,338 |
10+ | $3,303,771 | $3,468,960 | $3,634,150 | $3,799,338 |
Technically, a minimum-salary contract could cover five years for a player with full Bird rights, but in actuality, that never happens.
While some second-round picks and undrafted free agents will sign three- or four-year minimum-salary contracts, a minimum deal exceeding two years is rare for a player with more than a year or two of NBA experience under his belt.
This explanation was really helpful. I like the respect being paid to experience. It probably feels better for a vet to be making more than the latest rookie.
I was hoping Gordon could back up Brunson. Okay so who’s left